Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Essay --

One with dispositionWilliam Wordsworth wrote the poem I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud in the year of 1802 while he was walking home with his sister Dorothy, and they find and saw a patch of daffodils (http//writersalmanac.publicradio.org/). This poem deals with the interchange between world and nature, and then due to the comparison between the poet and the daffodils, the poet makes himself a piece or disassemble of nature. Furthermore, the daffodils are portrayed as heavenly and spiritual creatures who bound (l 6) which makes the poet become one as well. This symbolizes the poets minds fountain of ideas which repair him to write, and it leads to his minds rebirth. Hence, the poet uses figurative language and form to show the overflow of ideas and rebirth that is achieved through the transfer between man and nature.Wordsworth makes use of similes and personifications to stimulate an exchange between man and nature. To begin with, the poet utilizes the simile I wandered nongre garious as a pervert (l 1) to compare himself to a cloud. Due to the cloud existing as a part of nature, when he compares himself to it, he becomes a part of the natural world as well. The poet then personifies the daffodils with the assistance of the lyric crowd(l 3) and dancing (l 6). These terms are human attributes given to the daffodils, thus making the daffodils human. Furthermore, the poet uses these terms to construct a simile examine daffodils and humans. When these daffodils, which are now human, are compared to humans, which are a part of nature, they interchange positions. Therefore, through the usage of similes and personifications, Wordsworth exhibits an exchange between man and nature. hobby this exchange between man and nature,... ...would not be complete. This overlap, which completes the meaning, is an overflow of thoughts. Therefore, the couplets, twain being excessive and overlapping, symbolize an overflow of thoughts.The poem conveys a deuce-ace that unit es as one through the number of stanzas. In the first trey stanzas, the poet is wandering in nature and is experiencing the looker of nature. The stanzas, being three, and dealing with the beauty of nature that is said to be heavenly symbolizes the trinity between man, nature, and god. Furthermore, the stern stanza deals with the poets remembrance of nature on the couch. The tail stanza, being one, deals with the uniformity of both nature and heavenly into men. Hence, the first three stanzas symbolize the exchange between man and nature that leads to an exchange between man and god, and the fourth stanza symbolizes them becoming one in man.

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